Seeing the Unseeable: A Philosophical Reflection on Ontic Uncertainty, Aphantasia, and the Emergence of Statistical Space
Introduction Physics is often described as the most visual of the sciences. We draw diagrams of spacetime, sketch wavefunctions, imagine fields rippling across a cosmic stage. We picture trajectories, potentials, and curvatures. We are taught to “see” the world in a certain way. But what happens when one cannot see at all? I am aphantasic. I do not form mental images. When I close my eyes, there is no inner chalkboard, no wavepacket spreading across an imagined axis, no geometric intuition waiting to be summoned. There is only darkness and thought. This absence of imagery did not distance me from physics. It shaped the way I understand it. It led me, slowly and unexpectedly, toward a worldview in which the fundamental fabric of reality is not made of particles, fields, or spacetime points, but of something far more subtle: Ontic uncertainty—a structured, irreducible “cloud” of possibility from which all physical concepts emerge. In this essay, I reflect on how this perspective arose, h...